Connect with us

Sports

Lindsey Vonn crashes while on pace for podium finish at 2026 Olympic venue

Published

on

Lindsey Vonn crashes while on pace for podium finish at 2026 Olympic venue

Lindsey Vonn crashed out of a World Cup Super-G race on Sunday while on pace for her best finish so far in her comeback to alpine skiing.

The American star was tracking toward a podium spot in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy — on the hill that will host the 2026 Olympics — when she went down onto her left side coming around a turn just over 50 seconds into her run and spun in the snow. She slammed her pole in frustration, got up on her own power, and skied down the hill, waving to the crowd at the bottom.

Vonn, one of 10 skiers who didn’t finish Sunday, had the 10th fastest split in the first sector of the race and fourth quickest in the second. She was just a half-second off the lead at that point — a pace that would’ve netted her a top-three position had she kept it up through the finish. Italy’s Federica Brignone won in 1:21.64, with the Swiss pair of Lara Gut-Behrami (1:22.22) and Corinne Suter (1:22.72) rounding out the podium.

“I definitely made some mistakes on the top, but I got a little bit behind the course and tried to pull it off,” Vonn told reporters after the race. “Then my skis kind of clicked together and I lost my balance.”


Lindsey Vonn shows her frustration as she makes her way down the mountain following her fall in Sunday’s Super-G race in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. (Julian Finney / Getty Images)

The Super-G crash was her second of the weekend after Vonn also went down during downhill training on Thursday.

Advertisement

It was Vonn’s fifth race back on the World Cup circuit since announcing an unlikely return to the sport after nearly six years away. Injuries drove her to retire in 2019, but a knee replacement in 2024 left her feeling pain-free and planning a comeback. She returned in December and finished 14th in a Super-G in St. Moritz, Switzerland, then took sixth in downhill and fourth in Super-G last week in St. Anton, Austria. On Saturday in Cortina, Vonn finished 20th in downhill.

A three-time Olympic medalist, including gold in the downhill at the 2010 Vancouver Games, Vonn holds the all-time record with 12 World Cup wins at Cortina d’Ampezzo, which will host the 2026 Games on the Olympia delle Tofane track that is a regular stop on the women’s tour.

In a post on X later Sunday, Vonn didn’t seem all that deterred by the rough weekend at one of her favorite venues.

“S— happens,” she wrote. “On to the next race.”

Tracking Lindsey Vonn’s World Cup return

Advertisement
Date Venue Discipline Pos. Time Behind lead

Dec. 21

St. Moritz

Super-G

14th

1:16.36

Advertisement

1.18

Jan. 11

St. Anton

Downhill

6th

Advertisement

1:16.66

0.58

Jan. 12

St. Anton

Super-G

Advertisement

4th

1:18.75

1.24

Jan. 18

Cortina d’Ampezzo

Advertisement

Downhill

20th

1:35.63

1.68

Jan. 19

Advertisement

Cortina d’Ampezzo

Super-G

DNF

N/A

N/A

Advertisement

Jacqueline Wiles was the top American in Saturday’s downhill, finishing seventh. Lauren Macuga, the rising 22-year-old who won the St. Anton Super-G for her first World Cup race win, was the top U.S. finisher Sunday, taking 13th.

Vonn’s fourth-place finish in St. Anton made her the oldest woman to finish that high in a World Cup race. The 34-year-old Brignone, who now has four victories this season, is the oldest to ever win a World Cup race.

The strong results have brought Vonn back into the picture at the sport’s highest level. She’s 17th in the World Cup downhill standings and 14th in Super-G. Last week, Vonn told the Associated Press that she would retire again after the 2026 Olympics, if she makes the U.S. team there. The Olympic women’s alpine skiing program is slated to begin Feb. 8, 2026.

The World Cup speed skiing circuit heads to Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, next weekend, where Vonn is again scheduled to compete in the downhill and Super-G. After that, the World Cup schedule pauses for the world championships in Saalbach, Austria, which begin Feb. 4.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Lindsey Vonn, at historic stop for women’s alpine, kicks off her World Cup return

Advertisement

(Photo of Lindsey Vonn during Sunday’s Super-G: Mattia Ozbot / Getty Images)

Sports

Thanks to the transfer portal, this March’s Cinderella stories are players, not teams

Published

on

Thanks to the transfer portal, this March’s Cinderella stories are players, not teams

To find Cinderella stories at this men’s Final Four, you have to look at the name on the back of the jersey rather than the front.

For the second time in the history of the NCAA Tournament’s modern-day bracketing practices, all four top seeds advanced to the national semifinals. It will be No. 1 Florida vs. No. 1 Auburn and No. 1 Houston vs. No. 1 Duke on Saturday in the national semifinals, a perfect ending to a most chalky March Madness. Only one double-digit seed reached the Sweet 16, and all of the teams in the regional semifinals were from Power 4 conferences.

Where have you gone, Loyola Chicago and Sister Jean? Check the transfer portal.

Two of the very best players competing for a championship this weekend in San Antonio — Florida’s Walter Clayton Jr. and Auburn’s Johni Broome — might not be where they are today if not for this new world order of college sports, with unlimited, unrestricted transfers and name, image and likeness compensation.

Clayton is the former high school football star from Florida whose passion for basketball led him to New Rochelle, N.Y., a hidden gem uncovered by Rick Pitino during his time at Iona. You probably didn’t even notice Clayton scoring 15 points for the Gaels against eventual national champion UConn in the first round of the 2023 NCAA Tournament.

Advertisement

Now, he’s being compared to Steph Curry.

“He’s obviously a blessing to have in our program, have on our team,” Florida coach Todd Golden said. “He’s an incredible player, but outside of that, he’s a great leader. He’s been everything we could have asked him to be for this program since he got to campus two years ago.”

Broome, another Floridian, was the 471st-rated prospect in his recruiting class per 247Sports Composite rankings, not even good enough to get an offer from Florida Atlantic. To be fair, former FAU coach Dusty May put together a team good enough to reach a Final Four two years ago without Broome, so not being good enough for those Owls is no slight.

Instead, Broome landed at Morehead State and blossomed in two seasons in the Ohio Valley Conference before becoming the best player in the SEC in his third year at Auburn.

“Shoutout to Morehead State,” he said. “I think those two years of my college career have helped me become who I am.”

Advertisement

We’re not quite ready to declare the NCAA Tournament underdog dead. The trends are working against the mid-majors — specifically, relaxed transfer rules that turn every player in the country into a free agent every year.

For years, draconian transfer rules gave way too much power to schools and coaches. Not only did undergraduate basketball players have to sit out a season after transferring — a non-compete clause for non-employees — but schools could block athletes from going to certain schools, just because.

It was borderline shameful. Even Mark Emmert, the former NCAA president who was not exactly known for getting out in front of potential problems, knew change was needed.

“How complicated could this be?” Emmert said at the last Final Four in San Antonio in 2018. “It’s about students changing schools. And yet I’ve never seen anything that’s quite as intractable a problem as this one because you just can’t get agreement.”

Even back then, before the portal was a viable option for every player from superstar to walk-on, transfers were on the rise in college basketball, with instances increasing from 10 percent of Division I players in 2010 to about 13 percent in 2016.

Advertisement

The Villanova team that won the NCAA Tournament in 2018 started forward Eric Paschall, a transfer from Fordham. Surely, Rams fans were wondering what could have been as they watched Paschall score 24 points in the semifinal victory against Kansas.

Villanova, Kansas, Michigan and Sister Jean’s Loyola Chicago all started at least one transfer in the Final Four that season. There were a total of nine on those rosters, including players who were sitting out to comply with the NCAA rules of the time.

The Wolverines reached the title game with the help of Division III transfer Duncan Robinson.

According to the NCAA’s most recent reported figures, over 1,200 Division I men’s basketball players transferred after the 2022-23 season. Typically, there are about 4,200 scholarship athletes playing Division I men’s basketball.

This year’s Final Four teams have 20 scholarship transfers from other NCAA schools on their rosters, led by Auburn with seven. Florida has six, Duke has five and Houston has two, both from other Big 12 programs. Cougars star L.J. Cryer is in the Final Four for the second time after being part of Baylor’s 2021 title team as a freshman.

Advertisement

Florida, Auburn and Duke all have at least one starter who once played at a mid-major.

For Duke, that’s guard Sion James, a former three-star recruit from Sugar Hill, Ga. He played four seasons at Tulane before taking advantage of the extra year of eligibility all athletes received in the wake of the pandemic to become a glue guy for one of the most storied and prestigious programs in the country.

“I’d played a lot of college basketball games, but none in the tournament, and I knew that we’d have a chance to win a national championship,” James said. “And it’s cool being here, however many months later, just a few games away.”

The pendulum has swung hard toward player empowerment when it comes to transfer rules. It’s fair to say we might be in the too-much-ice-cream phase. Bouncing around the country and averaging about a school per season is probably not ideal for players with minimal pro prospects who would benefit from graduating from … somewhere.

Purdue coach Matt Painter made an interesting point earlier in the tournament about balancing the opportunity to get a degree with recognizing that for some players, college will be the last chance they have to make money playing basketball.

Advertisement

“I don’t think that’s a bad (thing) … like, why not?” he said.

Painter’s 2024-25 team, it should be noted, had no transfers, but former Boilermaker Mason Gillis is back in the Final Four with Duke.

Will Wade, who took the NC State head coaching job after leading 12th-seeded McNeese past Clemson in one of the few true upsets of this tournament, talked about selling his mid-major program as a place for players to develop into power-conference transfers. More and more mid-majors are recruiting that way, resigned to the fact that, yes, they are indeed farm teams for the big schools.

Maybe with a revenue sharing system coming to college sports, along with player contracts and something that replicates a salary cap for monied schools that opt into the system, the low-mid-major poaching will slow down. Probably not.

That’s not great news for the future of Cinderella in March Madness, but just last year Oakland, Yale, Grand Canyon, James Madison and Duquesne won first-round games as double-digit seeds. Then again, Morehead State made the tournament last year, two seasons after Broome left, and lost in the first round as a 14-seed to Illinois. Imagine what that team could have been with Broome.

Advertisement

We’re also only two years removed from FAU’s Final Four run. One of those players, Alijah Martin, is back in the Final Four with Florida. Others, from Michigan’s Vladislav Goldin to Arkansas’ Johnell Davis, came a win or two away from returns of their own.

Then there is Chaney Johnson, who played three seasons of Division II basketball at Alabama Huntsville before becoming a key reserve for Auburn.

Fans might lament the transient nature of college basketball, with mercenary players quickly coming and going, but this is Clayton’s second season at Florida. Broome has been at Auburn for three years, and it’s probably not a coincidence the Tigers only added three transfers this past offseason to a rotation with lots of multi-year veterans.

Thanks to NIL, Auburn fans have watched Broome and this core of players develop to be able to cut down the nets on the way to a Final Four.

“Man, words can’t even describe it,” Broome said after the regional final victory against Michigan State in Atlanta. “To stand on top of the ladder in front of all the Auburn fans still being there, traveling and witnessing it as well, and looking down and seeing my teammates, the whole Auburn family, it just means the world to me. To kind of be able to deliver for the Auburn family.”

Advertisement

And they all lived happily ever after.

(Illustration: Will Tullos / The Athletic; Photos: Andy Lyons, Alex Slitz / Getty Images)

Continue Reading

Sports

NFL star Trey Hendrickson rips Bengals' brass over 'poor' communication during contract negotiations

Published

on

NFL star Trey Hendrickson rips Bengals' brass over 'poor' communication during contract negotiations

Trey Hendrickson has spent his past four NFL seasons with the Cincinnati Bengals. The star pass rusher has just one year remaining on his contract with the Bengals and recently requested permission to seek a trade.

Despite the trade request, Hendrickson hopes to remain in Cincinnati. 

“However it shakes out, there’s nowhere I’d rather be,” he said in early March. 

During the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis, Bengals director of personnel Duke Tobin suggested the team and Hendrickson’s agent were making progress on a new contract for the star defensive end.

Advertisement

Trey Hendrickson of the Cincinnati Bengals before a game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Acrisure Stadium Dec. 23, 2023, in Pittsburgh.  (Justin K. Aller/Getty Images)

However, Bengals executive vice president Katie Blackburn’s recent comments at the league’s annual meeting did not give credence to Tobin’s remarks. Blackburn’s words prompted a frustrated Hendrickson to call out the organization for an apparent lack of communication in recent months.

“That was a little disappointing, because communication has been poor over the last couple months,” Hendrickson told “The Pat McAfee Show” in reference to Blackburn’s remarks.

BENGALS STAR JA’MARR CHASE TAKES THINLY VEILED JAB AT CITY OF CINCINNATI AFTER SIGNING RECORD-BREAKING DEAL

“That’s something that I hold in high regard. They have not communicated with my agent directly. It’s been something that’s been a little bit frustrating.”

Advertisement
Trey Hendrickson

Cincinnati Bengals defensive end Trey Hendrickson after a defensive stop Dec. 19, 2021, at Empower Field in Denver, Colo. (Albert Cesare/The Enquirer/USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

Hendrickson added that talks with the Bengals have largely been “here and there.”

Hendrickson finished each of the past two seasons with 17½ sacks. His estimated base salary of just over $15 million for next season pales in comparison to his counterparts. Myles Garrett agreed to a record-breaking contract extension with the Cleveland Browns earlier this offseason. The deal will pay Garrett roughly $40 million annually.

Las Vegas Raiders pass rusher Maxx Crosby inked a three-year extension last month and will make an estimated $35.5 million per season.

Trey Hendrickson sacks a quarterback

Gardner Minshew II (10) of the Indianapolis Colts is sacked by Trey Hendrickson (91) of the Cincinnati Bengals at Paycor Stadium Dec. 10, 2023, in Cincinnati. (Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

“I think he [Hendrickson] should be happy at certain rates that maybe he doesn’t think he’d be happy at,” Blackburn said Tuesday. “I think some of it is on him to be happy at some point, and if he’s not, you know, that’s what holds it up sometimes. So, you know, it takes him to say yes to something. And, also, we have all the respect in the world for him. He’s been a great player. We’re happy to have him. And so maybe we’ll find a way to get something to work. We’re just gonna see where it goes.”

Despite the latest turn of events, Hendrickson said the “line of communication” remains open on his end.

Advertisement

“They’re more than welcome to call me,” Hendrickson said. “I’ve had my cellphone, same cellphone number since high school. Open line of communication is always open with me and my agent. So, if they have anything they’d like to discuss, we’ve been nothing but willing to listen.”

Hendrickson made it clear he was looking for a long-term contract, not a short-term deal.

“We don’t have any desires of being highest paid or, you know, first in line,” he said. “I’m not going to go into all the details, but, like, there are things that I’m willing to do and willing not to budge on. I don’t think I want to play for incentives that will be out of my control. I don’t think I want to play (on a) short-term contract. … I would like to tell my wife, ‘Here’s where we’re going to live. Here’s where we’re going to build a family together.’ You know?”

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Sports

Prep sports roundup: Bishop Alemany wins fourth straight Mission League game

Published

on

Prep sports roundup: Bishop Alemany wins fourth straight Mission League game

Don’t look now, but Bishop Alemany is getting hot in Mission League baseball. The Warriors won their fourth consecutive league game under first-year coach Randy Thompson on Tuesday, earning a 23-2 victory over Sherman Oaks Notre Dame.

Thompson’s son, Brody, playing his second game of the season after sitting out because of transfer restrictions, hit his first home run and had three hits and two RBIs. Sophomore Chase Stevenson hit two doubles and two singles and had four RBIs. Jacob Ortega added three hits.

Loyola 14, Chaminade 5: The Cubs (10-4, 6-3) hit five home runs, including a three-run home run from Jack Murray, in the Mission League win. Davis Bender had an inside-the-park home run and finished with three hits and three RBIs.

Crespi 3, Sierra Canyon 1: The unbeaten Celts (14-0) received two hits from Nate Lopez, Landon Hodge and Gavin Huff and strong pitching from Tyler Walton and Mikey Martinez.

Harvard-Westlake 8, St. Francis 1: Jack Laffitte had two hits and three RBIs and sophomore Justin Kirchner threw six innings, striking out six with no walks for Harvard-Westlake.

Advertisement

West Ranch 12, Valencia 0: Hunter Manning threw a two-hitter with 16 strikeouts and one walk for West Ranch. Ty Diaz had four hits and three RBIs.

Birmingham 1, Cleveland 0: Freshman Carlos Acuna threw the shutout, striking out six and walking none. His scoreless innings streak has reached 25 consecutive scoreless innings. Otis Bush was the tough-luck loser. Birmingham is 6-0 in the West Valley League.

JSerra 4, Servite 2: The Lions scored two runs in the ninth to win the Trinity League game. Jax Janeski thew 2 1/3 scoreless innings of relief. Max Reimers struck out eight in 6 2/3 innings.

El Camino Real 2, Granada Hills 1: Luke Howe struck out five and pitched a complete game for the Royals.

Chatsworth 10, Taft 8: Daniel Chiclayo had three hits for the Chancellors, who opened a 10-4 lead.

Advertisement

Banning 1, San Pedro 0: Anthony Camarena threw the shutout with eight strikeouts for Banning.

Narbonne 14, Rancho Dominguez 1: Twaine Meadows went four for four with two home runs and seven RBIs for Narbonne.

La Mirada 11, Downey 1: Kevin Jeon had a home run and three RBIs for the Matadores.

Norco 8, Temecula Valley 0: Freshman Jordan Ayala threw five scoreless innings and Dylan Steward had three hits and four RBIs for Norco.

Gahr 9, La Habra 7: Bryce Morrison went three for three to lead Gahr.

Advertisement

Fountain Valley 9, Edison 1: Tyler Peshke hit a three-run home run to support pitcher D’Angelo Diaz, who threw six innings.

Huntington Beach 4, Corona del Mar 3: Trent Grindlinger hit a two-run home run for 11-1 Huntington Beach.

Los Alamitos 8, Newport Harbor 0: Tristan Dalzel struck out 10 and allowed one hit in six innings for the Griffins. Tyler Smith had two hits and two RBIs.

Viewpoint 12, Las Vegas Doral Red Rocks 6: Izzy Parsky struck out 15 in five innings and also had three hits.

Corona Centennial 13, Brea Olinda 10: Aiden Simpson had a home run and two singles for the Huskies while delivering three RBIs.

Advertisement

Mission Viejo 17, Beckman 1: Logan Marsee had four RBIs for the Diablos.

Softball

Norco 3, Esperanza 0: Coral Williams tossed a no-hitter, striking out six, for Norco in a Michelle Carew tournament opener. Leighton Gray contributed two RBIs. Norco also defeated Capistrano Valley 3-0.

Granada Hills 14, Valencia 4: Jas Soriano and Sam Esparza each had three hits for Granada Hills.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending